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11 Most Spectacular Sculptures That Are Ever Made

1. The Skin - Chaudfontaine Park, Belgium

Designed by Mehmet Ali Uysal, a Turkish artist, this giant clothespin seems to hold on to a mound of grass. Built for the Festival of Five Seasons, this splendid sculpture is situated in Chaudfontaine Park in Belgium.

2. The Headington Shark – Oxfordshire, England

Landed in the roof of a house in New High Street in Oxfordshire on the 41th anniversary of the atomic bomb in Nagasaki, The Headington Shark is still there to expressing anger, desperation and impotence as the commissioner of the sculpture and the owner of the house Bill Heine describes.

3. Broken Chair – Geneva, Switzerland

Being 12 meters high, The Broken Chair is situated in front of the Palace of Nations is Geneva. This giant chair was constructed by Daniel Berset at the request of Handicap International in 1997. The aim was to urge all countries to sign Ottowa Treaty and ban the landmines.

4. The Fork – Vevey, Switzerland

Stuck in the Lake Geneva’s north shore in 1995 for the 10th anniversary of The Alimentarium Museum, The Fork is now an iconic landmark of Vevey, Switzerland. Though it was aimed to be temporary, the people of Vevey loved it so much that it was eventually declared to stay there permanently.

5. Calamita Cosmica – Rome, Italy

Created by the artist Gino de Dominics, “Calamita Cosmica” meaning the “Cosmic Magnet” is a giant skeleton having the perfect proportion except for the nose. In 2007, it was first appeared in the Palazzo Reale in Milan and now this 28 meters long skeleton is located in the Museum of Contemporary Art in Rome.

6. The Bather – Hamburg, Germany

7. The Hand – Brava Beach, Uruguay

Located on Parada 4 at Brava Beach, this giant hand depicts someone drowning and it is aimed to be a warning sign for the swimmers. Made by Chilean artist Mario Irarrázabal in 1982, The Hand is now Uruguay’s most reputable landmark.

9. Dropped Cone – Cologne, Germany

Commissioned by Neumarkt Galerie and created by renowned artist Clause Oldenburg in 2001, strangely enough the Dropped Cone was aimed only to draw attention and make people around to consume ice-cream.

Located at La Troba University in Bundoora, the Upside Down Monument of Charles la Trobe was created by Charles Robb. As he explains, the monument was there in the university to remind people that universities should turn ideas on their heads, too.

11. Cupid’s Span – San Francisco, U.S.A

Created by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, Cupid’s Span was stuck into near the Bay Bridge in San Francisco in 1992. It is said to be inspired by the San Francisco’s reputation as the home port of Eros.

About Author

Sezin TUNCER

Defining herself as a "memory collector", Sezin is always in the search of doing something entertaining. Her fuel is the Sun as she's a spring-born person and she is in love with life only when she reads, writes, travels and when she eats nice food. Now, she works as a Content Editor at Eventegg.